HR Perspective with MEMORY NGUWI
MOST organisations believe they have a pay structure, but what they actually have is a collection of salaries set at different times, by different managers, under different pressures. When you examine it closely, there is no consistent logic linking one salary to another. Two people doing work of similar value can be paid very differently, and no one can confidently explain why. That is how compensation problems build up until they start affecting morale, retention, and costs.
A pay structure is a clear framework that defines how jobs are paid based on their value to the organisation. Jobs are grouped into grades, and each grade has a salary range with a minimum, midpoint, and maximum. The minimum represents the lowest acceptable pay for that level of work, the midpoint represents the market-aligned rate for a fully competent employee, and the maximum represents the upper limit for sustained high performance in that role. This creates a controlled, logical way to manage pay, rather than treating each salary as a separate decision.
Without a pay structure, every salary decision becomes a negotiation influenced by urgency, pressure, or who is involved in the discussion. Over time, this leads to unjustified pay gaps that are difficult to correct. Organisations then find themselves constantly adjusting salaries to deal with complaints, resignations, or counter-offers. These adjustments rarely fix the underlying problem because there is no framework guiding them.
A proper pay structure anchors every role within a defined range and brings discipline into how people are paid. New employees should typically enter somewhere between the minimum and slightly below the midpoint, depending on their experience and readiness to perform. The midpoint is not a starting point; it represents the pay of someone who is fully competent and consistently delivering in the role. This distinction is critical because it prevents organisations from overpaying new hires and creating internal inequities from the start.
Experienced, competent employees should be positioned around the midpoint because that is where the market expects a fully capable performer to be. If someone has been in the role long enough to master it and deliver consistently, paying them significantly below the midpoint is a clear signal of underpayment. Over time, this leads to dissatisfaction and increases the risk of losing strong performers. The midpoint is therefore not just a number; it is a reference point for fairness and competitiveness.
High-performing employees who consistently deliver above expectations can progress beyond the midpoint toward the upper end of the range. This progression must be controlled and linked to sustained contribution, not short-term performance spikes or pressure. Without this discipline, employees quickly reach the top of the range without a clear reason, which creates long-term cost and equity problems. A pay structure ensures that progression is earned and aligned with value.
One of the most common and damaging mistakes organisations make is paying employees below the minimum of the grade. The minimum is not an arbitrary number; it represents the lowest acceptable pay for that level of work. Paying below it indicates the organisation is knowingly underpaying for the role, creating immediate inequity. It also exposes the organisation to constant pressure to correct mistakes, as employees will eventually realise they are being paid below what the job is worth.
Equally problematic is clustering employees very close to the minimum. When most employees in a grade sit near the bottom of the range, it means the structure exists on paper but is not being applied properly. This creates a situation where employees have little room to grow financially within the role, even as they gain experience and improve performance. Over time, this leads to frustration because effort and growth are not reflected in pay.
At the other extreme, paying employees above the maximum creates a different set of problems. Once someone is paid beyond the range, the structure no longer applies to them, and managing future increases becomes difficult. It also creates internal inconsistencies, especially when others in the same grade are paid within the defined range. Overpayment at the top end often spreads to other employees, who demand similar treatment, pushing the entire wage bill upwards.
A pay structure also protects the organisation from the common problem of overpaying new hires relative to existing staff. Without clear entry points and ranges, new employees are often brought in at higher salaries to secure them quickly. This creates immediate inequity and forces the organisation to adjust the pay of existing employees, which increases costs significantly. A structured approach ensures that hiring decisions remain competitive but controlled.
Another key benefit of a pay structure is that it allows the organisation to manage salary progression in a predictable way. Employees can see how their pay can grow within a role and what it takes to move to the next level. This reduces uncertainty and makes compensation discussions more straight forward. It also helps managers make decisions that are consistent across teams and departments.
Organisations without a pay structure often operate in a constant reactive mode. Every increase, counter-offer, or complaint is handled individually, without considering the broader impact. This leads to a cycle of adjustments that never stabilises. A pay structure shifts the organisation from reacting to managing, which is a fundamental difference.
Many organisations avoid implementing a pay structure because they know it will expose existing inconsistencies. That concern is valid because the process will reveal where people are underpaid, overpaid, or incorrectly positioned. However, avoiding the issue only allows it to grow and become more expensive to fix later. A pay structure provides a structured way to identify and correct these problems over time.
In the end, a pay structure is not just about organising salaries, it is about bringing control, fairness, and logic into compensation decisions. It defines where people should enter, how they should progress, and what they should be paid at different stages of competence. Without it, organisations rely on judgment and negotiation, which leads to inconsistency and cost problems. With it, compensation becomes a managed system that supports both the business and its people.
Nguwi is the managing consultant of Industrial Psychology Consultants and a registered occupational psychologist